Rundlett Middle School

Library Pathfinder

Topic: Underground Railroad






Definition/Introduction

What is the topic? What does it cover?

The Underground Railroad was a network of safe houses and other places established in the North before the Civil War. These places provided sanctuary and assistance to escaped slaves seeking to be free.

Catalog Subject Headings or Keywords

Underground railroad
Slavery
Antislavery movements
Civil War
Emancipation

Dewey Numbers

326 Slavery and emancipation
973.6

Print Resources

Reference titles [dictionaries, encyclopedias, atlases, specific subject references]

Klein, Martin A. The A to Z of Slavery and Abolition. Scarecrow Press, 2002.

Slavery Throughout History. UXL, c2000.

Student Almanac of African American History. Greenwood Press, 2003.

General titles [nonfiction, any suitable fiction]

Be sure to check the school online catalog to find suitable materials

Fradin, Dennis B. Bound For the North Star : True Stories of Fugitive Slaves. Clarion Books, c2000.

Haskins, James. Get On Board : The Story of the Underground Railroad. Scholastic, c1993.

Isaacs, Sally Senzell. Life on the Underground Railroad. Heinemann Library, c2002.

Lester, Julius. To Be a Slave. Dial Books, c1998.

Sawyer, Kem Knapp. The Underground Railroad in American History. Enslow Publishers, c1997.

Swain, Gwenyth. President of the Underground Railroad : A Story About Levi Coffin. Carolrhoda Books, c2001.

Journals

Be sure to check the online periodical database which lists a great many articles.

“The Antislavery Movement”, Cobblestone Magazine, February 1993, Vol. 14, #2.

Crew, Spencer R.. “All Aboard the Underground Railroad”. Cobblestone, Feb2003, Vol. 24 Issue 2, p3, 4p, 4c

Sharif, Dara N.. “Freedom's Trail”. Scholastic News -- Senior Edition, 1/17/2003, Vol. 71 Issue 14, p4, 2p, 3c, 2bw

Wellington, Darryl Lorenzo. “The Most Famous Abductor On The Underground Railroad”. Christian Science Monitor, 1/20/2004, Vol. 96 Issue 37, p19, 0p, 1c

Web Resources

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Underground Railroad

Imagine you are a slave in the 1850s. You’ve never known freedom but you are about to begin a hard, dangerous journey to find it.
The Underground Railroad was a loose association of people, not a system of tracks. Indeed, much of a typical flight to freedom involved many miles of walking, usually at night to avoid detection. Still, it is possible to see these patterns in the escape
The Underground Railroad, a vast network of people who helped fugitive slaves escape to the North and to Canada, was not run by any single organization or person. Rather, it consisted of many individuals -- many whites but predominantly black -- who knew
Learn about the Underground Railroad and the struggle for freedom.
Descriptions of the houses connected with the Underground Railroad, including the Nathan and Polly Johnson house on 7th St.
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